It was with the 1862 gold rush to Boise Basin that the development of
the State of Idaho began. The Basin story is a fascination one, well
deserving of its place in history. This brief summary only highlights key
points of the area’s history.

The rush was on. Originally, people traveled by steamer up the Columbia
River to Umatilla, departing from Umatilla by stage lines, and finally
journeying by pack-train to the Boise Basin. Difficult winters and
shortages of food made life treacherous. One year a food riot occurred
because the spring supplies from Walla Walla had not arrived. The Basin’s
population swelled to 25,000. The mining proved extensive and the gold was
evenly distributed through out the Basin. Many claimed it was the "best
mining district we ever saw". The mining laws were considered fair and
liberal. On February 4, 1864 Boise County was established. This same year
wagon roads brought the wagon trains, hauled by four, six , eight, or even
twelve horses or mules. The saw mill ran continuously with rough lumber
building up cities like magic.

In 1863 Idaho City had grown to 6000 people and had 250 places of
business. Idaho City assumed the notoriety as being the best mining camp
in the Basin and the general rendezvous of miners, speculators, and
gamblers. There was plenty of amusement. Streets were thronged with
wagons, horses, mule, and cattle. Idaho City also was favored by its never
failing water supply.

The basin attracted families as it offered special appeal to those
seeking homes. More children and women were in evidence here than in most
other mining camps. Two early schools were in operations well as a lending
library. The Basin also believed in and appreciated good government.

The height of the boom lasted from 1863 to 1866. By 1867 many sold out
to Chinese miners who were able, through industrious work, to make the
mines pay; the 1870 Census lists 1700 Chinese. The rich gold fields were
considered "panned out" as most readily worked streams had been worked.
Another major factor in the decline was the high loss caused by
destructive fires. Fires hit Idaho City in 1865, 1867, 1868 and 1871.

Mining techniques changed from sluicing to hydraulics, carving out vast
hillsides. Quartz mining prospered in the 1870s with a number of stamp
mills in operation. Dredge mining began in 1898 and continued till the
1950’s. Unfortunately, much of the lower lying land in the Basin has been
disfigured by dredging. Also, camps like Buena Vista located across Elk
Creek from Idaho City disappeared through dredging. Fires have also
continued their rampage, wiping out Quartzberg in 1931.

Any holiday was a time of special festivity in the Basin. Fourth of
July was celebrated with picnics and parades characterized by flags,
mottos, banners, and bands. Saint Patrick’s Day brought supper and
speeches, especially in Pioneer City which was chiefly Irish and referred
to as New Dublin. Christmas programs were also festive events.

Inspired by an Indian’s story of gold that could be scooped up by the
handful; a party of prospectors led by George Grimes discovered the
fabulously rich area known for the past Century as the Boise Basin in
1862. Located on Grimes Pass is the monument of George Grimes.

Gold was there. So were hardships, heartache and tragedy. Grimes was
killed within days of the discovery. The first miners staked large and
extensive claims and their first settlement became known as "Hog-em",
later changed to Pioneer City and now Pioneerville.

Rivalry between the miners was common, and when a party of prospectors
ventured over the divide onto Elk Creek and discovered even richer gold
deposits, they kept their find a secret by telling a tale of being chased
by huge bears. The gulch they discovered, near the end of Idaho City’s
Main Street even today carries the name of "Bear Run"

The $5,000 in gold which these first miners carried out to civilization
started one of the greatest gold rushes the world has ever seen….the
richest strike in America. It is estimated that more than $250,000,000 was
taken from this area in the two decades following its discovery….greater
than the California 49er and of the Klondike in Alaska. It is reported
that Gold from the Boise Basin helped to strengthen the Union treasury
during the most crucial days of the Civil War, perhaps preserving the
United States.

Thousands upon thousands of miners rushed pell-mell into the Boise
Basin. Towns sprang up everywhere. There were Beaver, Banner, Granite,
Forrest and Summit cities…. Buena Vista, Eureka, Pomona and Boston…..Pioneerville,
Placerville, Centerville and Quartsbury, Clarksville, Graham and Idaho
City. Some have vanished completely with even their exact location in
doubt….many lie in decaying ruin while others are struggling to preserve
the way of life that make the Boise Basin famous.

But of all the communities, Idaho City was said to have been the
bawdiest and lustiest of the Boise Basin’s offspring. A rip-roaring mining
town, it became the hub of territorial commerce and almost overnight
became the largest metropolis in the Idaho Territory, boasting a
population in excess of ten thousand for more than two decades.

Idaho City was the birthplace of the "Vigilante" movement that later
swept like wildfire throughout the west. Here it is said the Rev. Charles
Kingsley, whose home still stands on Wall Street, instigated the
self-styled law of the "Vigilantes" that brought a semblance of law and
order to the West.

Two major fires have swept the town. In 1865 and again in 1867, fire
destroyed over 300 buildings with losses estimated at over a million
dollars. However, some of the best examples of early day brick work and
wooden architecture still exist in Idaho City. Many buildings erected in
the 1860’s and costing between $15,000 and $30,000 are still standing.

Idaho City was one of the leading cities between Denver and the Pacific
Coast, attracting such top entertainment as the Dan Rice Circus (world’s
largest at the time) and the nation’s top stage and opera stars who played
at the community’s five theaters.

Life was not all culture in the Basin’s early days. Other entertainment
attracted a rougher element as attested by one account which appeared in
the Idaho World in "Several parties were found in the streets on Tuesday
morning. Some with fractured skulls; some with bunged eyes and swollen
faces, indicating very clearly that there had been a muss somewhere during
the night. Blood was freely sprinkled about the town on woodpiles and
sidewalks. As the puddles of blood were distributed over a large district,
it was impossible to locate the fight."

Mr. Grandjean was the second Forest Supervisor on the Sawtooth Forest
Reserve in January 1907. He became Forest Supervisor of the Sawtooth
National Forest (West) in February, 1908, when the Forest was split into
two divisions, East and West. From that date until July, 1908, he remained
on this assignment, except during the month of May when he was detailed as
District (Regional) Inspector.

His name is perpetuated in Grandjean Peak and Grandjean Creek, at the
head of the South Fork of the Payette River, and in the old Grandjean
Ranger Station, now a part of the Sawtooth Lodge.

Gold was the principle factor in the establishment of many present day
towns including Idaho City, Idaho also known as the Boise Basin. During
the Civil War the Basin was the scene of the richest gold rush in American
history. It is said to have produced more gold than all of Alaska.

An Indian’s story of the yellow metal led a party of prospectors into
the Boise Basin in the summer of 1862. George Grimes, Moses Splawn and ten
other miners were the first to come into the area. Shortly after their
arrival, Grimes was killed by Indians. The remainder of the party returned
to Walls to get reinforcements against other Indian attacks and to obtain
winter provisions. Later that same year Captain Bledsoe took a party into
Placerville. A few days later Captain Jeff Standifer set up a camp at
Idaho City.

J. Marian More (sometimes spelled Moore) was one of the early miners
who came to the Boise Basin. He became very wealthy from his prospecting,
owning several mines around Idaho City. Soon he began buying mines in the
Silver City area. More was involved in a mine dispute in Silver City which
resulted in several killings. Finally, a meeting was held, differences
settled, and papers were signed to seal the bargains. As More was
preparing to return to Idaho City, he was shot and killed. His body was
taken to Idaho City for burial in Boot Hill. Hundreds of people turned out
for the largest Masonic funeral ever held in that area.

There was a rapid influx of people into the Boise Basin country
following the discovery of gold on Grimes Creek. The majority of people
were miners and prospectors whose main interest was to acquire the mineral
wealth from the streams and soils of the area. Merchants, packers,
lawyers, ranchers, and preachers also moved into the Basin.

Idaho City was first called Bannock or West Bannock. There was a town
in Montana also called Bannock, so the Idaho legislature changed the name
of the Idaho town to Idaho City. By the middle of September, 1863, Idaho
City had a population of 6,267 (360 women, 224 children). At that time it
was the largest city in the Northwest. Placerville previously had been the
most populous. Boise City had a population of nearly 1,000.

With the rush to the Basin mines, there was a great need for materials
to build houses and business establishments. Freight charges were high as
there were no wagon roads made until the late summer of 1864. Lumber was
in great demand with sawyers sometimes working night and day. B. L.
Warriner owned one of the first sawmills, located on Grimes Creek in 1862.
This was a very crude affair, resembling the present day buzz saw. Power
was supplied by an old steam engine or mill stream. Lumber was sold at
$100 to $200 per thousand board feet.

There were different methods used to take the yellow metal from the
creek beds and gulches in Boise Basin. The first type was placer mining or
panning. The tools a miner needed were a pick, shovel, and pan. The pan
was a sheet of iron or tin, which looked like a bread pan, and was often
used for this purpose. Placer mining was a rather simple operation. First,
the prospector would scoop up a pan of pebbles from the bed of a stream
and fill the pan with water. By shaking the pan and getting rid of some of
the water and pebbles, he eventually removed everything from the pan
except the gold; which had sunk to the bottom, since it was heavier than
the rest. Little flakes of gold dust, called colors, could be uncovered,
and sometimes lumps or nuggets were found. The rocker was also used to
placer for gold. It resembled a baby’s cradle with the footboard knocked
out. Instead of slats, there was a piece of sheet iron punched full of
holes. The rocker was put next to the stream, and one man threw shovelfuls
of dirt on the iron sheet while another man poured water over it and
rocked the machine back and forth. The heavy gold fell through the holes
and lodged behind cleats fastened to the bottom of the rocker.

Sluice boxes were even more effective in mining. Several boxes, ten to
twelve feet long and a foot wide were made and set end to end. Dirt was
dumped in to the boxes, then strong currents of water from the ditch wee
run through them. Again the gold sank and was held by cleats.

Gold Hill, just north of Idaho City, was mined hydraulically. This
method is similar to sluice box mining. The miner shot powerful streams of
water at the hillside until it caved in. Then the dirt was run through a
string of sluice boxes. Miners worked around the clock at the Gold Hill
Mines, with huge bonfires built around the area to see by. Wages were
$6.00 a day and $7.00 a night.

The richest claim in the Idaho City area in 1863 was owned by seven
men. It contained 2,000 square feet and ran to the edge of town. Bedrock
averaged one dollar per pan and as high as $9.25. Mining was done right in
town. Lawsuits were numerous when houses began collapsing after being
undermined. Montgomery Street panned at $16.00 a pan.

Idaho City had two hundred merchants in 1864 and was still growing. Two
new theaters were finished for the pleasure of the miners. Gambling,
billiards, drinking and dancing were favorite pastimes. Most miners wore
flannel shirts, a slouched hat, a large bandanna tied around their necks,
pantaloons tucked into heavy hobnailed boots, and six-shooters on their
hips.

In the winter of 1865, Idaho City was snowed in with seven feet of
snow. Pack trains were unable to reach the town for several weeks. A bread
famine occurred and flour prices went to fifty cents a pound, but none was
available in the town. The few men who had flour stashed away were in
danger of being mobbed. In April, the first pack train arrived with
provisions. There was a mad rush to buy flour and other supplies. Days
later another pack train arrived and soon flour prices were down to
twenty-five cents a pound.

In a report by J. A. Chittenden, Superintendent of Public Instruction,
dated December 1, 1865, there were four schools in Boise County with six
hundred and two students between the ages of four and twenty-one.

In 1863, Father A. Z. Poulin, Silver City, built the first Catholic
Church in Idaho proper at Idaho City. The church and the convent next door
were saved from the fire in 1865 by men who carried wet sacks onto the
roof. The buildings were burned in the 1867 fire, however, and the present
building was built shortly thereafter.

The most loved preacher of early times was Bishop Daniel S. Tuttle. He
was a missionary Bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church for Montana,
Utah, and Idaho. In 1866, he began his work in Idaho, holding services
wherever he could find a place. It was not uncommon to see gold dust, as
well as coins and greenbacks, in the collection plate.

The second paper published in the Idaho Territory was a nonpartisan
paper. The paper was started in 1863. It was later sold and the new owner
changed the name from the Boise News to the Idaho World. The paper was
published every Saturday evening and sold for fifty cents a copy. Papers
from California arrived two weeks after publication and sold anywhere from
one dollar to two dollars and fifty cents a copy.

On the night of May 18, 1865, disaster struck Idaho City. A fire
started about nine that evening near the center of town. The fire is
believed to have started in the upper story of a dance hall. Since
everything was made of pine and full of pitch, the fire moved swiftly. The
fire lasted about three hours and lit up the sky for miles around. Only a
few businesses were left untouched by the flames and smoke. Many men who
had been considered wealthy were left penniless in a very short time. Some
merchants had underground cellars which enabled them to salvage a few
items. Miners from all over the Basin came running into town when they saw
the sky lighted by the fire. Looters took what they could carry from
stores before they were engulfed in flames. Some people saw nothing wrong
with this since no one was hurt. They thought it was be better to let
someone use what they could rather than let everything go up in smoke, and
they surely could not sort things out to the rightful owners later. One
merchant, Mr. Craft, who had been holding several citizens’ gold bags for
safe keeping, kept a cool head when he was the fire. He engaged George
Dwight to take all the gold away from the town until the next day. Shortly
after George had gone, the depositors approached Mr. Craft, demanding
their money. Mr. Craft told them that all of the gold was safe and that it
would be available the next day. George meanwhile, had carried the one
hundred pounds of gold bags to a hill and sat down to watch the fire. The
next day he returned the bags to Mr. Craft, who distributed them to the
rightful owners.

Everyone went to work to rebuild the town, and by July, 1865, it was
nearly completed. May, 1867 another fire swept through the town but was
not as disastrous as the first.

Stealing horses, robbing stages, and killing were common around the
Boise Basin as bands of desperadoes came into the gold camps. Vigilante
Committees were formed who tried criminals in secret, and later arrested
them. Their punishment was usually hanging. Protection of law could not be
offered from far away Olympia, Washington, so Idaho Territory was
separated. The Governor of Washington assigned William Noble, Frank More,
and John C. Smith as commissioners of Boise County and instructed them to
establish the County seat at Idaho City in 1863. The first county officers
besides the commissioners were Sheriff, Sumner Pinkham; Probate Judge
Daniel McLaughlin; Auditor, W. R. Underwood; Treasurer, Charles Vajin; and
Assessor George Goodman.

A famous political battle occurred in Idaho City in June, 1870.
Congressman E. E. Holbrook and a gambler named Douglas met about eight one
evening at the corner of Wall and Main Street. Angry words were passed
between them, and then both men drew their guns. Eleven shots were fired.
Holbrook was taken to his law office with several bullet holes in his
abdomen. The next morning he was dead. Douglas vanished in the dark of
night. There were discrepancies in the account of who fired the first
shot, but everyone agreed that the firing continued until both guns were
empty.

Old Mose Kempner was a raw hider from the Banner Mine. He seemed to
have funds, but was often broke, and his notes of hand floated about.
Being once sued, a trial was held in the old courthouse, and Mose’s note
was shown around, passing from hand to hand and finally into the hands of
Mose himself, who promptly shoved it in his mouth, chewed it up with his
wad of cut plug, and spat it down between the boards in the courtroom
floor. The note being lost, the debt went unproved. Mose escaped judgment,
and for twenty years maintained absolute silence, confessing only in his
old age his clandestine mastication in the judicial presence.

The present courthouse was first used for businesses. The iron folding
doors were made in San Francisco and shipped up the Columbia River then
carried by ox and horse teams into Idaho City. It was, no doubt a
difficult and expensive task. Each door weighed half a ton. The doors were
used for fire protection more than against thieves. The original
courthouse was two blocks from the present one. It was made of rough
lumber with gaping holes in the floor.

The courthouse was a popular place in the old days and had many
interesting cases. The desk that is now in the courtroom could tell many
tales. In the drawer, written in pencil and still legible, is this
inscription by Judge Stewart, "George H. Stewart, District Judge,
sentenced Herman St. Clair to be hung at this desk November 20, 1897."
With the signatures, "J. A. Lippincott, Sheriff and C. B. Mosher, Deputy."
Herman St. Clair was found guilty of murder, in the first degree, of John
Decker. The murder was committed on October 21, 1897. St. Clair was first
sentenced to be hung by the neck until dead on January 14, 1898, between
the hours of nine a.m. and three p.m. However, he received a stay of
execution from the Supreme Court. He tried to escape from the Idaho City
jail on April 27, 1898, but was unsuccessful. He was finally hung on June
24, 1898.

Four thousand Chinamen were in the Idaho Territory from 1869 to 1875.
They were employed mostly as laundrymen, cooks, house servants, gardeners,
and miners. They were good workers and always paid their debts. The white
men cheated, tormented, and took advantage of the Chinese whenever
possible. One Chinaman in Idaho City was a skilled goldsmith. He made
beautiful finger rings and was noted for his engraving. The Chinese miners
banded together to work harder for their profits, but they were happy to
makes two or three dollars a day. Pon Yam was a prominent Chinese
businessman. His store building is located on the corner of Montgomery
Street and Commercial Street. Pon Yam had a wife and sons in Canton, a
pretty black-haired girl in Idaho City, and owned a two or three karat
diamond, the largest diamond in the gold camp. The Chinese never fought
with the white man, but they had many disagreements with their countrymen.

The Chinese saved their money so their remains could be sent back to
China when they died. Some Chinese were not wealthy enough to have their
remains sent back to the homeland; therefore, they were left in Boot Hill.
Chinese funerals were gala affairs. Large crowds of people would walk to
the cemetery, dropping colored paper and chanting occasionally.

The Chinese Joss House or Temple was an interesting place. During feast
days the doors were always left open for those who came to worship or make
an offering. On days of worship, each Chinese company would parade through
the streets of Idaho City to the Joss House with gongs and cymbals
clanging. Some of the companies carried banners, and others carried
Chinese food delicacies. A roast pig, which was carried on a long pole
between two men, was the main offering. These offering were spread before
the Joss with much ceremony and bowing. When the ceremony was over, the
companies would march back to their place of business or residence. These
events along with Chinese New Year celebration, Chinese Mason Day and many
others were colorful events for the white citizen to watch.

Building a new community in the nineteenth century was a task full of
hardships and disappointments. It took a great deal of courage and
determination to withstand all the trials of life one hundred years ago.
These pioneers are to be long remembered for their help in developing the
Boise Basin Area.

In 1864 it was a nine hour stage coach ride from Idaho City to Boise
City. The uphill trip coming back took an hour longer, and there were no
guarantees at all after the snow fell.

The first gold in the Boise Basin was discovered near Centerville on
August 2, 1862. Soon settlements had sprung up all through the Boise
Basin, in December of 1862 Bannock City was founded.

Bannock City was located in the most rugged, remote region of
Washington Territory which was comprised of modern Washington, Idaho, and
western Montana. In March of 1863 President Lincoln established Idaho
Territory, and in 1864 Bannock City was renamed Idaho City. As many as
20,000 miners came to Idaho City, making it the largest city between St.
Louis and San Francisco. The first fire swept through the town on May 18,
1865 and destroyed 80% of the town in two hours. Idaho City was quickly
rebuilt. Exactly two years and a day later fire struck again, but this
time residents were ready and more buildings were saved. Some of those
buildings still stand today.

St. Joseph’s Catholic Church 1867

St. Joseph’s Catholic Church is the oldest built for Euro-Americans in
Idaho. The fire of 1865, St Joseph’s survived because of an estimated one
hundred people rushed to keep the flames from its roof. It was not so
lucky when the second fire hit in May of 1867. The building standing today
was completed in November that same year and the few vestments and altar
pieces rescued from the fire are still inside.

Boise Basin Museum 1867

The Boise Basin Museum was originally the Post Office. It took
Postmaster James Pinney only twenty-nine days to build the Montgomery
Street post office after the second great fire in Idaho City destroyed the
first one on Main Street. Pinney lived in part of the building and in
addition to stamps; he sold books, musical instruments, pistols,
magazines, knives and toys from the post office side. Pinney also operated
a circulating library.

After Pinney resigned as postmaster in 1872, the building housed a meat
market and later the Idaho World newspaper. It remained a post office
until 1910.

In 1953 the building was deeded to the city for $10 and other valuable
considerations." During the Gold Rush Days in June 1958, it was opened to
the public as a museum.

Masonic Temple 1865

This is the home of Lodge #1 of Idaho’s Ancient Free and Accepted
Masons. After the original temple was destroyed in the town’s first great
fire in 1865, James Pinney a Mason himself received permission to build
the current structure. This two-story frame building utilized rough-sawn
board and batten that has been allowed to weather naturally. The north
side still has its original clapboard siding. The Lodge Bible and Charter,
which were saved from the 1865 fire, are still kept inside with other
historic and symbolic items. Idaho Lodge #1 moved its meetings to Boise in
the 1920’s, but its occasional use of the building makes the structure the
oldest Masonic Temple this side of the Mississippi River still in use.

Idaho Territorial Prison 1864

This hand-hewn prison was originally erected above Elk Creek, north of
Idaho City. It had fourteen cells and hand-wrought nails, chains, doors
lifts, and window irons were used to discourage escape. This rough
structure was used as a territorial prison until the 1870’s. The jail’s
original building site was undermined by placer mines and the structure
fell into Elk Creek.

It has been moved at least four times before coming to rest in its
present location.

Idaho City Hotel 1929

The Smith Hotel and Boarding House opened for business in 1930. Mrs.
Mary E. Smith catered mostly to logging crews. When the building was
purchased and renovated in 1974, it was determined that many of the
timbers are older than 1929, confirming the legend that part of the
structure may have come from an old hotel in Placerville.

I.O.O.F. Hall 1875

Pioneer Lodge N. 1, the oldest Odd Fellows Lodge in Idaho. Since the
original hall burned to the ground this one was built on the hill in the
hope of protecting it from fire. The upper floor was used for lodge
meetings and the ground floor for social gatherings. The structure uses
wood pegs and square nails, with three steel tie rods at both the first
and second floor ceiling levels.

Pon Yam House 1867

This is the only remaining building from Idaho City’s Chinese
population, which the 1870 census reported at 1,751  more than 45% of the
total. Nearly all the Chinese in Idaho City were from the Canton vicinity
of China.

Pon Yam was a successful businessman and a respected leader in the
community. It was reported he owned the largest diamond in the mining
camp, and he was often called upon to settle disputes among the Chinese
tongs. From this building he sold herbs and other Chinese products.

Boise Basin Mercantile 1867, 1868, 1869

Miners need supplies and groceries like anyone else, and they could
find almost anything they needed at the "Universal Store," or the local
mercantile.

The building is really three separate buildings, constructed in a
three-year sequence after the fire of 1867 substantially damaged the
original structure. Every effort was employed to guard against fire
damage: brick façade, iron doors and windows, and dirt packed into the
attic. Fire has never invaded this building leaving Idaho City with the
oldest mercantile in Idaho.

Idaho World 1867

The Idaho World is the oldest newspaper in Idaho still in publication.
It was founded as the Boise News in September 1863 by pioneer printers
Joseph and Thomas Butler.

A Chinese store called "Man Wo Corner" occupied this spot just before
Heman and Charles Jones, owners of the paper, converted it to their
newspaper office in 1883. Like the Mercantile across the street, it was
built of local low-fire brick and mortared with local clay. All the
windows and doors were protected with iron shutters, and the attic was
filled with dirt so that if the roof burned the building might be spared.
Fire was ever the threat in the gold camps. Although the building has been
used for several business endeavors, it was the newspaper office for most
of its existence. It is currently the home of historical printing
equipment.

Miner’s Exchange 1865

Still referred to by its last saloon name, the Miner’s Exchange has
played an active role in the history of Idaho City. It acquired its name
from the practice of exchanging gold dust for legal tender, or a good
drink. The saloon was the place where miners found entertainment as
distraction from the daily work at their claims.

This is one of the oldest buildings in Idaho, having survived the fire
of 1867. It is an early example of the brick construction that was
prevalent in northwest mining camps. Again, earth in the attic and iron
shutters was efforts to protect the structure.

Today Boise County offices occupy this building. The original bar and
back bar has become the desk for the County Commissioners meetings.

Boise County Courthouse 1871

This building was begun in July of 1871 and completed three months
later. This was no small task considering the degree of fire protection
employed. The great iron folding doors, each weighing half a ton, were
made in San Francisco, barged up the Columbia River, and carried overland
by horse and ox teams. Three feet of packed earth filled the attic space,
once estimated to weight about 200 tons. Local clay bricks and mortar
finished the walls.

It began as a general store, then a hardware and trinket shop, and then
became the Orchard Hotel. The original courthouse on Montgomery Street was
deteriorating, and during Mose Kempner’s trial it became obvious there was
need for a new one. It had been built with enough room between the
floorboards to accommodate tobacco chewers, but Kempner reportedly chewed
up and spit out a note that was being passed around as evidence against
him. Hence the county bought the Orchard Hotel in 1909. The building’s
interior has been remodeled to replicate those earlier days and court is
still in session several days a week.

Schoolhouse 1891

This two-story frame building served as a schoolhouse for seventy
years. In June of 1891, the first school house was torn down and
construction of this one began. The skeleton was finished in July, but so
were the funds. Determined to open the new doors for the falls school
term, the three school trustees, John Kennaly, Charles Mann, and O. A.
Duquette, each volunteered three days’ work a week. The community had a
dance which lasted until 4:00 a.m. and raised $137.95. Everybody’s efforts
paid off, and the building was completed in late September, 1891. Grades
one through four were taught downstairs and five through eight on the top
level.

In a report from the Superintendent of Public Instruction, dated 1865,
there were four schools in Boise County with 605 students between the ages
of four and twenty-one. When the present Basin School was constructed in
1963, this building became Idaho City’s City Hall.

Pioneer Cemetery

Idaho City has been using this cemetery since 1863. Approximately 200
grave markers still stand and many of those have been repaired, restored,
and maintained by the Idaho City Historical Foundation. It is estimated
that 2,000 graves are scattered through the forty timbered acres. Of the
first 200 graves, only 28 were for people who died of natural causes.

(Excerpts from Bricks & Boardwalks by the Idaho City Historical
Foundation)

Horseshoe Bend derives its name from its location. A lower part of the
city lies on a fertile horseshoe shaped peninsula cut by the scenic Payette River. The Boise National Forest and private rangeland surround the
city.

In 1862 prospectors discovered large quantities of placer gold at Grimes Pass. So named by the Grimes and Splawn
parties, it is 35 miles east of Horseshoe Bend in the Boise Basin where Grimes
was killed by Native Americans while prospecting and was buried at the
summit. This led to a gold rush that within the next year brought 16,000
fortune seekers into the Basin.

Some of the prospectors came through present day Horseshoe Bend in route to the
Basin that lay an additional 20 miles east. At that time, the town was a way
station between the Boise Basin mines and the Dalles, Oregon, where ships came up the Columbia River from the seacoast.

Some found that food prices paid by the miners were so high that there was more
profit in producing and selling fresh food than mining.

Soon settlers began establishing homesteads in the arable parts of the region
where they could divert streams for irrigation. They began raising farm animals
and growing crops for sale to the miners.

Because of the Boise Basin's cold winters and deep snows, many
miners came out of the mountains to winter in the Horseshoe Bend area and to
graze any livestock on the grass covered foothills. Cattle and sheep ranching
would later become a major industry in the low lying western foothills of the Boise Basin.

As a result of the mining industry, the timber industry also developed and grew
in the Horseshoe Bend area. Heavy timbers were needed for mining shafts and the
Payette River provided an excellent route to move
logs to the many log mills along its banks and tributaries.

At that time, a man named Warriner built a saw mill in present day Horseshoe
Bend. They called the town that built up around the mill Warrinersville until
1867 when residents changed the name to Horseshoe Bend.

Other lumbermen built sawmills that they eventually consolidated into a single
mill. Boise Cascade became the final owner of the mill which closed in 1998.

Circa 1912 the Oregon Short Line Railroad constructed a line from Emmett,
through Horseshoe Bend and up to Long Valley. The railroad began transporting
logs to the mills.

On April
14, 1947, Horseshoe Bend became an
incorporated village. On May 9, 1967 the village reorganized to become a city. The first mayor
was Steve Helm.

Horseshoe Bend's population remained around 500 during the 1960's and
1970's. Subsequently, the population swelled to around 900, where it has
remained for the past several years.

With the decline of the natural resource based economy, the Horseshoe Bend
community is becoming an attractive community for people seeking small town
affordable housing within an easy commute to their jobs in nearby Boise.

History of the Garden Valley/Crouch Area

Crouch:

Roosevelt’s Tree Army Comes to
Town

In 1934 a new post office
established the identity of Crouch, now the commercial district for Garden
Valley. The town was named after Billy Crouch, a miner who homesteaded
near the confluence of the Middle and South Payette Rivers. In the 1920’s,
Crouch donated property for a new community hall in Garden Valley.

In 1933, the first Civilian Conservation Corps troops arrived at Camp
Gallagher, located a dozen miles or so upriver from Crouch. The CCC was
one of the New Deal programs initiated by President Franklin D. Roosevelt
to combat the Great Depression. Contrary to popular belief, Idaho suffered
more than most states in the Pacific Northwest during this time. From 1929
to 1932, the income of the average Idahoan dropped nearly fifty percent.

Between 1933 and 1942 over three million men enrolled in "Roosevelt’s
Tree Army." They earned thirty dollars a month, twenty-five of which were
sent to their families. This stipend, which seems terribly small compared
to today’s wages, kept many Americans off the relief rolls.

Most of the CCC boys came from urban areas back east. They were poor,
hungry, and lonely for their friends and relatives back home, so when the
Garden Valley Post Office was overwhelmed with their mail, a new one was
established at Crouch. The new post office was conveniently located so
that CCC troops working up the Middle Fork Payette River could pickup and
deliver mail to local residents on their way to and from camp.

The CCC’s helped support Garden Valley’s economy during the midst of
the nation’s economic crisis. Camp inspection reports indicate that local
settlers produced much of the food consumed at Gallagher Flat and Tie
Creek, another CCC camp established on the Middle Fork Payette River in
1937. The townspeople, in turn, sponsored weekly dances and movies for the
CCC enrollees.

Garden Valley: Yellow Gold and
Golden Grain

In 1862, prospectors found gold
in Boise Basin, located on the other side of the mountains south of the
river. Their discovery led to one of Idaho’s largest gold rushes. A year
later, the basin’s population, which included the Idaho City, Placerville,
Pioneerville, and Centerville gold camps, swelled to between twelve and
fourteen thousand miners.

Some of these miners, men like Thomas Scanlon, Patrick Glennon, and
Donald McBride, immediately recognized the potential profits from
supplying the basin’s gold camps with fresh meat, produce and dairy
products. They settled along the lush, fertile river terraces of the South
Fork, where several fur trappers, relics of Idaho’s fur trade era, had
already established squatter’s claims. One of those trappers, Charley
"Yank" Ladd, built the first fish trap on the Middle Fork Payette River
near its confluence with the South Fork. According to A.S. Abbott, a
pioneer son who wrote of his family’s experiences in Garden Valley, Ladd
sold "immense quantities of the delicious fellow" to local farmers and
miners in Boise Basin.

The valley’s population was culturally and ethnically diverse. Although
most of the immigrants hailed from Ireland and Scotland, they also came
from Bavaria, Denmark, England, Prussia, Norway, and Switzerland.
Mid-westerners from Illinois, Iowa, and Ohio were skilled farmers; still
others were merchants. By the turn of the century, the valley’s population
had grown from seventy-nine people in 1870, the year of Idaho’s first
census, to three hundred people. Most of the men were engaged in farming,
the rest were miners. Garden Valley developed into a close-knit community.
Today, the descendents of many of these old families still live in the
area.

Material taken from the Wildlife Canyon Scenic Byway Corridor
Management Plan November 2001.